Business Day

A big man’s free-speech straw man: when Musk took and shook Twitter

• Tesla CEO is a fighter against censorship, as long as the critique is not of him or his affairs

- KATE THOMPSON DAVY Thompson Davy, a freelance journalist, is an impactAFRI­CA fellow and WanaData member.

In eastern Ukraine, Russian troops are inching deeper into the country, leaving tales of war crimes in their wake. In KwaZulu-Natal, people and property have been washed away by rising floodwater­s. And in the digital streets, a rich guy bought a bunch of shares in a social media platform and the internet lost its mind.

Just a few years ago, any suggestion of the comparabil­ity of the above three news items would have seemed ludicrous. But while Tesla boss Elon Musk’s Twitter stock grab lacks the life-and-death immediacy of war and extreme weather, it matters — perhaps even more than I would like to admit.

To understand why, we need to quantify the importance of the platform, make a measure of the man at the centre of the story, and then assess the risk created as the two meet, Venndiagra­m style.

If your own news filters skew away from the latest kerfuffle, you might be surprised to learn that Musk’s purchase of a 9.2% share in Twitter shook the world last week. That stake means the sometimes-richest man in the world is officially the biggest shareholde­r in the platform, which has close to 400-million users.

From the moment the news broke, Twitter staffers (and we observers) were taken on a roller-coaster ride of updates that ranged from: “Oh my gosh, Musk is going to join the Twitter board and have so much influence over our beloved digital Hyde Park speaker’s corner!”; to “Oh my gosh, Musk has turned down the Twitter board seat. We are saved!”

Of course, if your news slants far-right of mine, first, “welcome, weird to have you here”, and second, the takes you are reading are likely to herald Musk as Twitter’s salvation: “Oh my, Musk is going to fix Twitter and save us from cancel culture!”

Wherever you lie on that spectrum, the point is that a single individual, Musk, now has a considerab­le degree of influence over what he himself calls “the de facto public town square”.

This kind of influence is scary enough when it is wielded by an elected person at least pretending to be a public servant but Musk is not an idealist, a politician or even vaguely consistent in his ideology. Instead, he seems driven almost purely by self-interest, dressed up as libertaria­nism which some might argue are essentiall­y the same thing.

WHIMS

In The Atlantic, Marina Koren argued that Musk has repeatedly shown his “impatience to shape the world, as quickly and as directly as possible, in the way [he deems] fit”. Koren outlines a long series of Musk’s business decisions and public statements, showing the inconsiste­ncy and whims that appear to drive him.

As other commentato­rs have also observed, Koren notes Musk’s “strong feelings about free speech” and how he authored several polls and tweets on the hot-button topic leading up to the purchase of those shares but, she argues, “ultimately he values control of the things he cares most about”, including Twitter.

Musk uses Twitter to communicat­e directly with world leaders and his fans, but on Twitter and in his businesses he has shown himself far less keen on any free speech that critiques him. And while he calls himself a “free speech absolutist”, multiple investigat­ive reports and unauthoris­ed biographie­s have shown him lashing out at and shutting down critics on investor calls and in media conference­s; and allegedly alienating and even firing staff who push back on matters of workplace culture or temper his promises on productivi­ty and targets.

I will not go through the full list of examples here, but rather encourage you to read The Atlantic article, as well as many others on the topic.

Musk has a demonstrab­le track record of being unpredicta­ble and unaccounta­ble. Two quick examples: CNBC reporting this week shows that he was tardy on disclosing this latest Twitter stock purchase to the US Securities & Exchange Commission, and a separate article in The Atlantic details how he has reneged on his promises to the community in south Texas where he is building a SpaceX installati­on.

If we are going to consider his words on free speech versus his actions on the same, I would point out the inconsiste­ncy in arguing that people (such as former US president Donald

Trump) should not be banned for tweets that appear to incite violence — while also objecting to the account @elonjet (which shares publicly available info about the whereabout­s of his private jet).

Musk famously offered the account owner $5,000 to shut it down, citing fears for his own safety. Even the past week has been a masterclas­s in flip-flopping, from promises — as Fortune reports — that the Twitter investment was essentiall­y “passive”, to running polls on the same Twitter on what changes the platform needs.

As for the board position that never happened, it is important to note that taking the seat would have meant limiting himself to no more than a 14.9% stock share and a duty to “act in the best interests of shareholde­rs”.

Not taking the seat, on the other hand, means he can continue to tweet a barrage of criticisms and polls-that-read-asthreats, and grow his shareholdi­ng or partner with other shareholde­rs for bigger, bolder plays.

Given all of the above, I tend to agree with Koren’s view that “Musk’s version of free speech ... seems to be one in which only powerful people can say what they please and escape any negative consequenc­es”.

Now that is a real threat, if we’re looking for one.

MUSK NOW HAS CONSIDERAB­LE INFLUENCE OVER WHAT HE HIMSELF CALLS ‘THE DE FACTO PUBLIC TOWN SQUARE’

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 ?? /Reuters ?? Driven by self-interest: Tesla CEO Elon Musk calls himself a ‘free speech absolutist’, yet has a track record of being unpredicta­ble and unaccounta­ble.
/Reuters Driven by self-interest: Tesla CEO Elon Musk calls himself a ‘free speech absolutist’, yet has a track record of being unpredicta­ble and unaccounta­ble.

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